Tennis and volleyball were my favorite sports in high school. I was an adequate player – good enough to get a high school letter and get pickup games at college but not good enough to play in a league. Tennis was a wonderful way to pass summer days.

Our family lived an active lifestyle, and Dana and her brother Scott were always involved in team sports, like soccer and softball. We had the good fortune to live near a community center with a tennis club. I would occasionally take the kids out to hit, and Scott would take tennis camp during the summer. I signed Dana up for maybe two different week-long camps prior to her getting sick with Transverse Myelitis and becoming paraplegic at age 10 ½.

Thank goodness Dana was in good physical shape, for it made her recovery and therapy easier. However, it was difficult adjusting to this “new normal,” as you can imagine. The smart, popular and athletic girl was now a passing memory, as far as she was concerned. I told Dana that she was not going to stay home watching TV all day. I had been told there were adaptive sports in downtown San Diego, and we were going to go down there to check it out. She hated going to play sports in strange wheelchairs with the other kids from all over the city, but I made her go, anyway. Despite doing well and making friends, she struggled going to school and being with her longtime, able-bodied friends, who had no understanding of the wheelchair world. Wheelchair sports were something to do, not enjoy.

How did Dana start to play?

I saw an announcement for a local wheelchair tennis camp supported by the Kiwanis in Coronado, Calif., when Dana was about 13. Little did I know that Paralympians Karin Korb and Sharon Clark and USTA Wheelchair staff would be coaching.

Dana had not picked up a racquet in years. After the first day, I was asked if she had ever played before, as they wanted to put her in a more advanced group. Her recognized athleticism was not the incredible thing about this camp, though. The most important thing was that Dana had the opportunity to see grown, beautiful women in wheelchairs moving about gracefully. They took Dana aside and told her to embrace the sport – to go out and play and to not sit back.

The camp was a life-changer for her. They offered her a tennis chair if she promised to practice twice a week and to enter two tournaments a year. She looked them in the eye and said, “OK.” I put the strange little chair in the car, and on the way home, Dana said, “There’s a tennis tournament in Irvine next week. I want to go.”

Why do you think it’s important for her to play tennis?

I have tears in my eyes now. This USTA camp with Karin and Sharon did more for Dana’s healing than any therapies provided her after her illness. Tennis has been a way to keep fit, meet new people and travel the world on her own. Tennis has fostered self-confidence and maturity, and coaching tennis to new young campers helped her realize how far she has come. Playing tennis while attending college and graduate school requires planning and discipline, all good skills to have in life.

The hard work and training has paid off in her representing the U.S. in the Rio Paralympics. Seeing her come into Maracana Stadium in Rio with Team USA is one of the most thrilling events of my life. Winning her first doubles match against the Brazilian team in their Center Stage was crazy! Walking into Arthur Ashe Stadium with her to warm up for the first wheelchair tennis match ever played on stadium court at the US Open in 2017 was an amazing thing. I never thought I would see her face on the side of the stadium, and then to come from behind and win her match... who knew she would go to the US Open and reach the doubles final? Who knew she would become ranked in the Top 10 in the world for both singles and doubles? I am so, so proud.

Tennis has helped Dana spread her wings and fly. Wherever the sport takes her, this tennis mom is proud of her achievements and is grateful for the support of the USTA.